Use the U-M Library Search to explore the Bentley's collections.
Hours:
Monday: 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM
Tuesday: 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM
Wednesday: 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM
Thursday: 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM
Friday: 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM
Exceptions
1150 Beal Avenue
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2113 U.S.A.
734-764-3482
Happy International Women’s Day!
Here are five remarkable women from Michigan history!
You can find out more about these women’s lives in the archives, by exploring:
⭐ The Louisa Reed Stowell papers
⭐ The Ruth Ellis papers
⭐ The Michigan Alumnus Magazine (most mentions of Dr. Ida Kahn occur between the 1890s and 1930s)
⭐ The Sojourner Truth scrapbook and ephemera in the Berenice Bryant Lowe papers
⭐ The Nannette Gardner papers
In addition to these, there are so many other remarkable women from Michigan history to discover!
You’re welcome to visit the Bentley during our open hours, and learn about even more amazing women from Michigan’s past.
To all of the women in Michigan today: we can’t wait to see the history you make!
#InternationalWomensDay #MichiganHistory #WomensHistoryMonth
Happy International Women’s Day!
Here are five remarkable women from Michigan history!
You can find out more about these women’s lives in the archives, by exploring:
⭐ The Louisa Reed Stowell papers
⭐ The Ruth Ellis papers
⭐ The Michigan Alumnus Magazine (most mentions of Dr. Ida Kahn occur between the 1890s and 1930s)
⭐ The Sojourner Truth scrapbook and ephemera in the Berenice Bryant Lowe papers
⭐ The Nannette Gardner papers
In addition to these, there are so many other remarkable women from Michigan history to discover!
You’re welcome to visit the Bentley during our open hours, and learn about even more amazing women from Michigan’s past.
To all of the women in Michigan today: we can’t wait to see the history you make!
#InternationalWomensDay #MichiganHistory #WomensHistoryMonth
...
Meet Alice Hamilton! An early student at U-M`s Medical School who went on to do life-saving work and research, she graduated in 1893.
"Those were very happy and exciting years,” Dr. Hamilton wrote in her autobiography about her time at Michigan. She described how training at U-M “fostered a spirit of inquiry, a habit of following a problem to its solution.”
While working as a professor at Northwestern University after graduation, she volunteered to help people in poverty access medical care at Hull House in Chicago.
There, she noticed a pattern in the illnesses of the people she helped: their workplaces.
So, Dr. Hamilton began investigating the impacts of toxic workplace hazards, such as lead poisoning.
Her research was foundational for laws protecting the health of workers in the U.S.!
Today, the Michigan Women’s Hall of Fame describes her as the “Mother of Industrial Health.”
Dr. Hamilton was granted two honorary degrees by U-M, in 1910 and 1948, and became the very first woman to join Harvard`s faculty in 1919.
Click through to see photos showing what her life was like at the University of Michigan in the 1890s, and to learn more about her remarkable work!
#WomensHistoryMonth #StudentLife #AliceHamilton #MedicalSchool
Meet Alice Hamilton! An early student at U-M`s Medical School who went on to do life-saving work and research, she graduated in 1893.
"Those were very happy and exciting years,” Dr. Hamilton wrote in her autobiography about her time at Michigan. She described how training at U-M “fostered a spirit of inquiry, a habit of following a problem to its solution.”
While working as a professor at Northwestern University after graduation, she volunteered to help people in poverty access medical care at Hull House in Chicago.
There, she noticed a pattern in the illnesses of the people she helped: their workplaces.
So, Dr. Hamilton began investigating the impacts of toxic workplace hazards, such as lead poisoning.
Her research was foundational for laws protecting the health of workers in the U.S.!
Today, the Michigan Women’s Hall of Fame describes her as the “Mother of Industrial Health.”
Dr. Hamilton was granted two honorary degrees by U-M, in 1910 and 1948, and became the very first woman to join Harvard`s faculty in 1919.
Click through to see photos showing what her life was like at the University of Michigan in the 1890s, and to learn more about her remarkable work!
#WomensHistoryMonth #StudentLife #AliceHamilton #MedicalSchool
...
If you’ve ever driven to Canada, chances are you’ve benefited from Cornelius Henderson’s work without even knowing it.
Cornelius Henderson was one of the earliest African American students to earn an engineering degree at U-M, graduating in 1911. When he attended U-M, he was the only African American student in his engineering class.
Over the course of his life, Cornelius helped create many remarkable structures, including two major crossings between the US and Canada: the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel, and the Ambassador Bridge.
At the time it was built, the Ambassador Bridge was the longest suspension bridge in the world!
You can learn more about Cornelius Henderson’s life at U-M, and beyond, in the article “Strong as Steel,” by Dr. Rashid Faisal, on the African American Student Project website.
📸: 1911 Michiganensian yearbook portrait, and a 1928 Ambassador Bridge photo from the William Christian Weber Papers
#CorneliusHenderson #UMich #BlackHistory #MichiganHistory
If you’ve ever driven to Canada, chances are you’ve benefited from Cornelius Henderson’s work without even knowing it.
Cornelius Henderson was one of the earliest African American students to earn an engineering degree at U-M, graduating in 1911. When he attended U-M, he was the only African American student in his engineering class.
Over the course of his life, Cornelius helped create many remarkable structures, including two major crossings between the US and Canada: the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel, and the Ambassador Bridge.
At the time it was built, the Ambassador Bridge was the longest suspension bridge in the world!
You can learn more about Cornelius Henderson’s life at U-M, and beyond, in the article “Strong as Steel,” by Dr. Rashid Faisal, on the African American Student Project website.
📸: 1911 Michiganensian yearbook portrait, and a 1928 Ambassador Bridge photo from the William Christian Weber Papers
#CorneliusHenderson #UMich #BlackHistory #MichiganHistory
...
Flashback to this view of Angell Hall on a snowy day in February, over 70 years ago!
This iconic U-M building was a hub for all kinds of campus activity back in 1954, when this photo was taken, just as it is today.
Here are just a few of the things that happened in Angell Hall during the year this photo was taken:
🎨 Lectures by visiting experts shared details about modern art and newspaper cartoons
📖 The student legislature held a massive student book exchange for old textbooks
🎓 Classes and presentations were held on topics such as philosophy, topography, neighboring galaxies, and opera
🎵 Students from the School of Music, Theater and Dance performed their musical recitals
📚 Professors held several different poetry readings
One of the most recognizable campus buildings, Angell Hall was built over 100 years ago, in 1924, and it’s still in use today!
You can find details like these about everyday campus events in Angell Hall, and other campus buildings, in the Michigan Daily Digital Archives.
You can also find more photos like this one in the News & Information Photographs collection!
#UMich #AngellHall #CampusLife #Snow #1950s #OldPhoto
Flashback to this view of Angell Hall on a snowy day in February, over 70 years ago!
This iconic U-M building was a hub for all kinds of campus activity back in 1954, when this photo was taken, just as it is today.
Here are just a few of the things that happened in Angell Hall during the year this photo was taken:
🎨 Lectures by visiting experts shared details about modern art and newspaper cartoons
📖 The student legislature held a massive student book exchange for old textbooks
🎓 Classes and presentations were held on topics such as philosophy, topography, neighboring galaxies, and opera
🎵 Students from the School of Music, Theater and Dance performed their musical recitals
📚 Professors held several different poetry readings
One of the most recognizable campus buildings, Angell Hall was built over 100 years ago, in 1924, and it’s still in use today!
You can find details like these about everyday campus events in Angell Hall, and other campus buildings, in the Michigan Daily Digital Archives.
You can also find more photos like this one in the News & Information Photographs collection!
#UMich #AngellHall #CampusLife #Snow #1950s #OldPhoto
...
Hours:
Monday: 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM
Tuesday: 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM
Wednesday: 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM
Thursday: 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM
Friday: 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM
Exceptions
1150 Beal Avenue
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2113 U.S.A.
734-764-3482